Abstract
In 1935, Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen (EPR) originated the famous “EPR paradox”
[1]. This argument concerns two spatially separated particles which have both
perfectly correlated positions and momenta, as is predicted possible by quantum
mechanics. The EPR paper spurred investigations into the nonlocality of quantum
mechanics, leading to a direct challenge of the philosophies taken for granted by most
physicists.The EPR conclusion was based on the assumption of local realism, and
thus the EPR argument pinpoints a contradiction between local realism and the
completeness of quantum mechanics.
Einstein’s 1927 gedanken experiment by using the probability representation of quantum states explained successfully.